CHAPTER II.
ON THE EQUATORIAL TELESCOPE, OR PORTABLE OBSERVATORY.
History of equatorials--Description of one of the simplest construction of these instruments--To adjust the equatorial for observation--To adjust the line of sight--Description of the _nonius_--To find the meridian line by one observation--Manner of observing stars and planets in the day-time
_page_ 453-464.
OBSERVATIONS, BY THE AUTHOR, ON THE FIXED STARS AND PLANETS, MADE IN THE DAY-TIME, BY THE EQUATORIAL.
Object of these observations--stars of the first and second magnitudes--General deductions from these observations
_page_ 464-469.
OBSERVATIONS ON THE PLANETS IN THE DAY-TIME.
Series of observations on _Venus_, when near the sun--Seen at the time of her superior conjunction in 1843--Conclusions deduced from these observations--phenomena observed during these observations--Remarkable phenomenon during an eclipse of the sun
_page_ 469-480.
OBSERVATIONS ON JUPITER AND OTHER PLANETS.
General conclusions, &c.
_page_ 480-485.
UTILITY OF CELESTIAL DAY OBSERVATIONS.
_page_ 485-491.
ON THE ASTRONOMICAL QUADRANT.
_page_ 492-496.
THE ASTRONOMICAL CIRCLE.
_page_ 496-502.
THE TRANSIT INSTRUMENT.
_page_ 502-505.